1890's ranching

Started by viejo coyote, June 05, 2012, 01:53:19 PM

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viejo coyote

I am looking for books and pictures describing 1890 ranching in Kansas, Oklahoma a d the Texas Panhandle.  Any help with titles would be greatly appreciated.  Thanks

Doc Neeley

All America lies at the end of the wilderness road, and our past is not a dead past, but still lives in us. Our forefathers had civilization inside themselves, the wild outside. We live in the civilization they created, but within us the wilderness still lingers. What they dreamed, we live, and what they lived, we dream. -- T.K. Whipple

Dusty Drifter

Time-Life Old West Series "The Cowboys" and "The Ranchers" would be a good place to start.

DD

Tascosa Joe

Try "6000 Miles of Fence" By J. Evetts Haley, or "The LS" by Dulce Sullivan.  The Haley book is about the XIT.  Another is "Hidetown, the story of Old Mobettie"  I dont remember the author and that may not be the exact title.   
NRA Life, TSRA Life, NCOWS  Life

Texas Lawdog

My grand father on my mother's side of the family in the Texas Panhandle during that time. He worked on the 6666 ranch, the Matador ranch, and some others  that I don't know the name of.   I don't have any pictures of him he died before I was born. I worked on Stanley Marsh's ranch near Amarillo when I was in HS. My mom's cousin was the foreman at the time. Stanley's ranch is adjacent to the LS ranch.
SASS#47185  RO I   ROII       NCOWS#2244  NCOWS Life #186  BOLD#393 GAF#318 SCORRS#1 SBSS#1485  WASA#666  RATS#111  BOSS#155  Storm#241 Henry 1860#92 W3G#1000  Warthog AZSA #28  American Plainsmen Society #69  Masonic Cowboy Shootist  Hiram's Rangers#18  FOP  Lt. Col  Grand Army of The Frontier, Life Member CAF
   Col.  CAF  NRA  TSRA   BOA  Dooley Gang  BOPP  ROWSS  Scarlet Mask Vigilance Society Great Lakes Freight and Mining Company  Cow Cracker Cavalry   Berger Sharpshooters "I had no Irons in the Fire". "Are you gonna pull those pistols or whistle Dixie"?

Texas Lawdog

Two more good sources are the Western museum at West Texas A&M in Canyon, Texas and the Ranching Heritage Museum at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Texas.
SASS#47185  RO I   ROII       NCOWS#2244  NCOWS Life #186  BOLD#393 GAF#318 SCORRS#1 SBSS#1485  WASA#666  RATS#111  BOSS#155  Storm#241 Henry 1860#92 W3G#1000  Warthog AZSA #28  American Plainsmen Society #69  Masonic Cowboy Shootist  Hiram's Rangers#18  FOP  Lt. Col  Grand Army of The Frontier, Life Member CAF
   Col.  CAF  NRA  TSRA   BOA  Dooley Gang  BOPP  ROWSS  Scarlet Mask Vigilance Society Great Lakes Freight and Mining Company  Cow Cracker Cavalry   Berger Sharpshooters "I had no Irons in the Fire". "Are you gonna pull those pistols or whistle Dixie"?

wildman1

"The American Cowboy" edited by Richard Collins. The Lyons Press. WM
WARTHOG, Dirty Rat #600, BOLD #1056, CGCS,GCSAA, NMLRA, NRA, AF&AM, CBBRC.  If all that cowboy has ever seen is a stockdam, he ain't gonna believe ya when ya tell him about whales.

ol coot

  
  Try a search for  Remount Ranch Wy.
  Isaac Noe's Greenland ranch Co.
  SLW ranch Co.
My Lord is my shepard, my bible is my guide, my horse is my partner, my colt's on my side.  
RGA#684
RAT#514
Storm#370
SASS#46209

GunClick Rick

Bunch a ole scudders!

1961MJS

Quote from: GunClick Rick on August 05, 2012, 02:56:36 PM
Nary a sidearm~ ;)


Hi

I read a book last year by a cowboy who lived until roughly the 1930's or 40's.  He stated that he kept the .45 Colt in his bed roll, but carried a lever action daily.  He also stated that the primary way to get rid of wolves was to lasso them and drag them to death.  Sounds efficient but a little on the cold side. 

Later

Bugscuffle

For a somewhat larger "picture of it was like, at least in Texas, check out tis site. They have all kids of maps showing everyting that you may want to know about the georphy of Texas at any period of time. Itt also has maps of te cattle trails, Indian wars, railroads, etc.
http://www.texasmapstore.com/Texas_Historical_Maps_s/27.htm
I will no longer respond to the rants of the small minded that want to sling mud rather than discuss in an adult manner.

GunClick Rick

When i was a kid ( ::) ) we owned a Beacon gas station and we would go to company picnics at Burris Park in Hanford,Ca.,on the way there was a swirving road that went through some ranch or farm land,i guess the workers would shoot the heck out of coyotes and then hang them all along the fence line on the side of the road,i remember waiting to see all the hangin coyotes,it was a wire fence too,been a long time since i been over there..
Bunch a ole scudders!

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